This study investigates how to schedule nanosatellite tasks more efficiently using Graph Neural Networks (GNN). In the Offline Nanosatellite Task Scheduling (ONTS) problem, the goal is to find the optimal schedule for tasks to be carried out in orbit while taking into account Quality-of-Service (QoS) considerations such as priority, minimum and maximum activation events, execution time-frames, periods, and execution windows, as well as constraints on the satellite's power resources and the complexity of energy harvesting and management. The ONTS problem has been approached using conventional mathematical formulations and precise methods, but their applicability to challenging cases of the problem is limited. This study examines the use of GNNs in this context, which has been effectively applied to many optimization problems, including traveling salesman problems, scheduling problems, and facility placement problems. Here, we fully represent MILP instances of the ONTS problem in bipartite graphs. We apply a feature aggregation and message-passing methodology allied to a ReLU activation function to learn using a classic deep learning model, obtaining an optimal set of parameters. Furthermore, we apply Explainable AI (XAI), another emerging field of research, to determine which features -- nodes, constraints -- had the most significant impact on learning performance, shedding light on the inner workings and decision process of such models. We also explored an early fixing approach by obtaining an accuracy above 80\% both in predicting the feasibility of a solution and the probability of a decision variable value being in the optimal solution. Our results point to GNNs as a potentially effective method for scheduling nanosatellite tasks and shed light on the advantages of explainable machine learning models for challenging combinatorial optimization problems.
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